The processes of collecting, recording and classifying information on the natural world will be explored this Friday by two visiting Cambridge University researchers.
Dr Edwin Rose and Professor Staffan Müller-Wille, from Cambridge’s Department of History and Philosophy of Science, will speak about the processes through which the knowledge of indigenous people was inserted into standardised systems of classifying and ordering from the time of Cook’s voyages through to the 1830s.
Natural history collecting formed an important part of voyages to the Pacific from the time of James Cook in the 1760s.
Cook had been instructed to observe, collect and take note of the uses of trees, fruits and grains while reporting on “the genus, temper, disposition & number of the natives”.
For European naturalists, many of the species they encountered were entirely new. For the indigenous people they encountered, plants and animals had been central to their societies for thousands of years.